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Cross-sectional analysis of CBF values was carried out among 668 volunteers and patients. Subjects were subdivided according to age, gender, and degree of cerebrovascular disease, ranging from healthy volunteers with or without risk factors for stroke to patients with multi-infarct dementia. Four-year longitudinal analysis was also carried out on 230 individuals from the original sample. Decrements in CBF values were evidenced by both cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis in relation to advancing age, progressive cerebrovascular disease, and dementia. Regional, age-related CBF declines in healthy volunteers were heterogeneous, possibly related to changes in levels of functional activity within different brain regions.
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Shaw et al. (Sun,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a09e72c16dfdfe7ed3473c2 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.34.7.855
Terry G. Shaw
United States Department of Veterans Affairs
Karl F. Mortel
Baylor College of Medicine
John Stirling Meyer
The Eye Care Institute
Neurology
Baylor College of Medicine
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